Lesson 1Calculating bandwidth and stability: closed-loop bandwidth from op-amp GBW, phase margin considerations, and compensation techniquesWi derive closed-loop bandwidth from op-amp gain-bandwidth product an feedback factor, den relate phase margin to stability an transient response. Compensation options fi capacitive loads an high gains get introduced wid design guidelines.
Relate GBW, feedback factor, and bandwidthInterpret Bode plots and phase margin targetsIdentify signs of marginal or unstable loopsDesign compensation for capacitive loadingCheck stability across process and temperatureLesson 2Practical component selection: finding and interpreting op-amp datasheets (examples of sensor-grade amplifiers)Dis section teach how fi read an compare op-amp datasheets fi sensor conditioning. Yu wi focus pon noise, offset, input range, supply options, an packaging, an learn fi screen parts quick against system requirements.
Identify sensor-grade amplifier familiesInterpret input offset and drift specificationsEvaluate noise, CMRR, and PSRR parametersCheck input and output voltage rangesAssess package, power, and cost constraintsLesson 3SPICE simulation plan for amplifier block: stimulus sources (differential sine, common-mode, noise sources), AC analysis, transient, noise analysis, and offset/error measurementsDis section build a structured SPICE plan fi di amplifier block, defining stimuli, analyses, an measurements. Yu wi learn how fi verify gain, bandwidth, noise, offset, an common-mode behavior before committing to PCB layout.
Define simulation objectives and key metricsSet up differential and common-mode sourcesPlan AC, transient, and noise analysesMeasure gain, offset, and linearity in SPICEOrganize testbenches for reuse and reviewLesson 4Designing for input impedance: techniques to achieve high differential and common-mode input impedanceWi check how fi achieve high input impedance fi differential an common-mode signals using op-amp input structures, buffer stages, an resistor choices, while controlling bias currents, leakage paths, an bandwidth limitations.
Define differential and common-mode impedanceUse buffer stages to isolate sensor loadingControl bias currents and leakage pathsGuarding and PCB techniques for high ZTrade-offs between impedance and bandwidthLesson 5Design documentation checklist: listing calculations, assumptions, part numbers, and margin analysis for PCB handoffDis section define a strict documentation package fi amplifier an sensor front-end designs, capturing calculations, assumptions, part choices, an margins so PCB, layout, an test teams can implement an review di circuit confident.
List design assumptions and operating conditionsRecord key equations and intermediate calculationsDocument part numbers and critical parametersCapture margin analysis and derating choicesDefine required tests and acceptance criteriaLesson 6Op-amp key parameters and selection process: input noise density, input bias current, input offset, GBW, slew rate, CMRR, PSRR, and supply rangeWi review critical op-amp parameters fi small-signal sensor interfaces an build a repeatable selection process. Emphasis pon noise density, bias current, GBW, slew rate, CMRR, PSRR, an supply range versus application needs.
Relate GBW and slew rate to signal bandwidthUnderstand input noise density and filtersBias current and source impedance interactionCMRR, PSRR, and supply rejection needsStep-by-step op-amp selection checklistLesson 7Resistor networks and gain calculation for differential amplifiers and instrumentation amps: deriving gain equations and loading effectsWi derive gain equations fi classic differential an instrumentation amplifier topologies, including resistor network constraints an loading. Emphasis pon matching, CMRR, an how sensor an ADC impedances alter effective gain.
Gain equations for basic differential stagesThree-op-amp instrumentation amp gain designImpact of resistor matching on CMRR and gainLoading from sensor and ADC input impedanceSelecting resistor values and power ratingsLesson 8Setting amplifier target specifications: gain, bandwidth, input impedance, offset, drift, and noise budgetDis section show how fi translate system-level sensor requirements into amplifier targets fi gain, bandwidth, input impedance, offset, drift, an noise. Yu wi create a concise specification table fi guide topology an part choices.
Translate sensor and ADC requirementsDefine gain, bandwidth, and headroom limitsSet input impedance and loading constraintsAllocate offset and drift performance goalsCreate a formal amplifier spec tableLesson 9Understanding differential sensor signals: source impedance, common-mode, and differential-mode conceptsDis section explain differential sensor behavior, including source impedance, common-mode level, an differential signal range. Yu wi learn how dese parameters affect noise, loading, an di choice a amplifier topology an reference scheme.
Define differential and common-mode componentsCharacterize sensor source impedance vs frequencyDetermine allowable common-mode voltage rangeRelate sensor specs to amplifier input limitsPlan cabling, shielding, and reference routingLesson 10Topology selection for small differential signals: instrumentation amplifier, differential amplifier, and difference-stage with front-end buffer — trade-offs and use casesDis section compare instrumentation amplifiers, classic differential amplifiers, an buffered difference stages fi small differential signals. Yu wi learn trade-offs in CMRR, noise, input range, cost, an layout complexity fi each topology.
Review classic differential amplifier stageThree-op-amp instrumentation amplifier useBuffered difference stage with front-end gainCompare CMRR, noise, and input rangeGuidelines for topology selection by sensorLesson 11Offset and drift budgeting: calculating expected DC error from input offset, bias currents, resistor tolerances, and thermal effectsHere wi build a quantitative DC error budget, combining op-amp offset, bias currents, resistor mismatch, an temperature drift. Yu wi learn fi allocate error limits, compute worst-case an RSS totals, an relate dem to sensor accuracy.
Define DC accuracy and allowable error budgetModel input offset and bias current effectsInclude resistor tolerance and mismatch termsAccount for temperature coefficients and driftCompare worst-case versus RSS error methodsLesson 12Noise sources in low-level signals: Johnson noise, amplifier input-referred noise, and environmental interferenceWi identify an quantify noise sources in low-level sensor signals, including resistor thermal noise, amplifier input noise, an environmental interference. Techniques fi modeling, budgeting, an reducing total noise get introduced.
Johnson noise of resistors and sensorsOp-amp voltage and current noise modelsInput-referred versus output noise conceptsEnvironmental and interference coupling pathsNoise budgeting and reduction strategiesLesson 13Expected simulation plots and measurements: gain vs frequency, phase, input-referred noise, output noise spectrum, transient response to 1 kHz sine, and worst-case offset scenariosDis section define di key plots an measurements expected from simulation an bench work. Yu wi connect Bode plots, noise spectra, transient responses, an offset sweeps to di original specifications an error budgets fi di design.
Gain and phase versus frequency Bode plotsInput-referred and output noise spectraTransient response to sine and step inputsOffset versus common-mode and temperatureCompare simulated and measured performance